We have seen several ways that differential equations arise in the natural world, from the growth of a population to the temperature of a cup of coffee. In this section, we look more closely at how differential equations give us a natural way to describe various phenoma. As we’ll see, the key is to understand the different factors that cause a quantity to change.
(b) Suppose that a water tank contains 100 gallons of salt water and that a salty solution, which contains 20 grams of salt in every gallon, enters the tank at 2 gallons per minute.
Preview Activity 7.5.1 demonstrates the kind of thinking we will be doing in this section. In each of the two examples we considered, there is a quantity, such as the amount of money in the bank account or the amount of salt in the tank, that is changing due to several factors. The governing differential equation states that the total rate of change is the difference between the rate of increase and the rate of decrease.
In the Great Lakes region, rivers flowing into the lakes carry a great deal of pollution in the form of small pieces of plastic averaging 1 millimeter in diameter. In order to understand how the amount of plastic in Lake Michigan is changing, construct a model for how this type of pollution has built up in the lake.
Let’s denote the amount of pollution in the lake by , where is measured in cubic meters of plastic and in years. Our goal is to describe the rate of change of this function; so we want to develop a differential equation describing .
First, we will measure how increases due to pollution flowing into the lake. We know that cubic meters of water enters the lake every year and each cubic meter of water contains cubic meters of pollution. Therefore, pollution enters the lake at the rate of
wateryear plastic watercubic m of plastic per year.
Second, we will measure how decreases due to pollution flowing out of the lake. If the total amount of pollution is cubic meters and the volume of Lake Michigan is cubic meters, then the concentration of plastic pollution in Lake Michigan is
The total rate of change of is thus the difference between the rate at which pollution enters the lake and the rate at which pollution leaves the lake; that is,
We have now found a differential equation that describes the rate at which the amount of pollution is changing. To understand the behavior of , we apply some of the techniques we have recently developed.
Because the differential equation is autonomous, we can sketch as a function of and then construct a slope field, as shown in Figure 7.5.2 and Figure 7.5.3.
These plots both show that is a stable equilibrium. Therefore, we should expect that the amount of pollution in Lake Michigan will stabilize near cubic meters of pollution.
There are many important lessons to learn from Example 7.5.1. Foremost is how we can develop a differential equation by thinking about the “total rate = rate in - rate out” model. In addition, we note how we can bring together all of our available understanding (plotting vs. , creating a slope field, solving the differential equation) to see how the differential equation describes the behavior of a changing quantity.
We can also explore what happens when certain aspects of the problem change. For instance, let’s suppose we are at a time when the plastic pollution entering Lake Michigan has stabilized at cubic meters, and that new legislation is passed to prevent this type of pollution entering the lake. So, there is no longer any inflow of plastic pollution to the lake. How does the amount of plastic pollution in Lake Michigan now change? For example, how long does it take for the amount of plastic pollution in the lake to halve?
It is a straightforward and familiar exercise to find that the solution to this equation is . The time that it takes for half of the pollution to flow out of the lake is given by where . Thus, we must solve the equation
Sketch a slope field for this differential equation, find any equilibrium solutions, and identify them as either stable or unstable. Write a sentence or two that describes the significance of the stability of the equilibrium solution.
Assuming that the initial dose of morphine is , solve the initial value problem to find . Use the fact that the half-life for the absorption of morphine is two hours to find the constant .
Suppose that a patient is given morphine intravenously at the rate of 3 milligrams per hour. Write a differential equation that combines the intravenous administration of morphine with the body’s natural absorption.
Assuming that there is initially no morphine in the patient’s bloodstream, solve the initial value problem to determine . What happens to after a very long time?
We may use the tools we have developed so far—slope fields, Euler’s methods, and our method for solving separable equations—to understand a quantity described by a differential equation.
A tank contains L of pure water. A solution that contains kg of sugar per liter enters the tank at the rate L/min. The solution is mixed and drains from the tank at the same rate.
A tank contains kg of salt and L of water. A solution of a concentration kg of salt per liter enters a tank at the rate L/min. The solution is mixed and drains from the tank at the same rate.
A young person with no initial capital invests dollars per year in a retirement account at an annual rate of return . Assume that investments are made continuously and that the return is compounded continuously.
Congratulations, you just won the lottery! In one option presented to you, you will be paid one million dollars a year for the next 25 years. You can deposit this money in an account that will earn 5% each year.
Set up a differential equation that describes the rate of change in the amount of money in the account. Two factors cause the amount to grow—first, you are depositing one millon dollars per year and second, you are earning 5% interest.
The second option presented to you is to take a lump sum of 10 million dollars, which you will deposit into a similar account. How much money will you have in that account after 25 years?
When a skydiver jumps from a plane, gravity causes her downward velocity to increase at the rate of meters per second squared. At the same time, wind resistance causes her velocity to decrease at a rate proportional to the velocity.
Using to represent the constant of proportionality, write a differential equation that describes the rate of change of the skydiver’s velocity.
Suppose that you have a water tank that holds 100 gallons of water. A briny solution, which contains 20 grams of salt per gallon, enters the tank at the rate of 3 gallons per minute.
What happens to after a very long time? Explain how you could have predicted this only knowing how much salt there is in each gallon of the briny solution that enters the tank.